Chapter 7 Thinking, Language and Intelligence: Module 21 Flashcards

1
Q

Cognitive Psychology

A

The branch of psychology that focuses on the study of higher mental processes, including thinking, language, memory, problem solving, knowing, judging, and decision making.

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2
Q

Thinking

A

The manipulation of representations of information.

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3
Q

Mental images

A

Representations in the mind that resemble the object or even being represented.

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4
Q

Concepts

A

A mental grouping of similar objects, event, or people.

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5
Q

Prototypes

A

Typical, highly representative examples of a concept.

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6
Q

Algorithm

A

A rule that, if applied appropriately, guarantees a solution to a problem.

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7
Q

Heuristic

A

A thinking strategy that may lead us to a solution to a problem or decision, but-unlike algorithms- may sometimes lead to errors.

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8
Q

Preparation

A

Understanding and diagnosing problems

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9
Q

Productions

A

Generating solutions.

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10
Q

Judgement

A

Evaluating solutions.

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11
Q

Well-defined problem

A

Both the nature of the problem itself and the information needed to solve it are available and clear.

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12
Q

Ill-defined problem

A

The specific nature of the problem is unclear and the information required to solve the problem is even less obvious.

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13
Q

Arrangement problems

A

Require the problem solver to rearrange or recombine elements in a way that will satisfy certain criterion. ex. Anagrams and puzzles

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14
Q

Problem of inducing structure

A

Person must identify the existing relationship among the elements presented and construct a new relationship among them.

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15
Q

Transformation problems

A

Consist of an initial state, a goal state, and a method for changing the initial state into the goal state.

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16
Q

Means-ends analysis

A

Involves repeated tests for differences between the desired outcome and what currently exists.

17
Q

Subgoals

A

Diving a problem into intermediate steps.

18
Q

Insight

A

A sudden awareness of the relationships among various elements that had previously appeared independent of one another.

19
Q

Functional fixedness

A

The tendency to think of an object only in terms of its typical use.

20
Q

Mental Set

A

The tendency for old patterns of problem solving to persist.

21
Q

Confirmation bias

A

The tendency to seek out and weight more heavily information that supports one’s initial hypotheses, and to ignore contradictory information that supports alternative hypotheses or solutions.

22
Q

Means-ends analysis

A

Involves repeated tests for differences between the desired outcome and what currently exists.

23
Q

Subgoals

A

Diving a problem into intermediate steps.

24
Q

Insight

A

A sudden awareness of the relationships among various elements that had previously appeared independent of one another.

25
Q

Functional fixedness

A

The tendency to think of an object only in terms of its typical use.

26
Q

Mental Set

A

The tendency for old patterns of problem solving to persist.

27
Q

Confirmation bias

A

The tendency to seek out and weight more heavily information that supports one’s initial hypotheses, and to ignore contradictory information that supports alternative hypotheses or solutions.

28
Q

Creativity

A

The ability to generate original ideas or solve problems in novel ways.

29
Q

Divergent thinking

A

The ability to generate unusual, yet appropriate, responses to problems or questions.

30
Q

Convergent thinking

A

Produces responses that are based primarily on knowledge and logic.

31
Q

Cognitive complexity

A

Preference for elaborate, intricate, and complex stimuli and thinking patterns.

32
Q

Fractionation

A

Allows us to examine each part for new possibilities and approaches, leading to a novel solution for the problem as a whole.